Important Announcement

Library Closing:: All locations of the Vigo County Public Library will be closed on Sunday, May 27 and Monday, May 28 in honor of Memorial Day.

External Database Access Unavailable: Databases are currently available inside the Main Library and West Branch. External access to some databases is unavailable until further notice. We apologize for the inconvenience.

Featured Events & News

Bingo Bunch meets weekly at the West Branch Library. Enjoy light refreshments as you play traditional and non-traditional Bingo. Prizes will be offered to the first to call out, "Bingo!" All levels of experience welcome. Bingo cards and number markers will be provided.

A cover-up that has spanned four Presidents pushes The Washington Post's first female owner and publisher, Katharine Graham, and Ben Bradlee, a hard-driving editor-in-chief, to join an unprecedented battle between the press and the United States government. Based on a true story. Refreshments will be served.

While searching for the perfect present for his beloved Aunt Lucy's 100th birthday, Paddington spots a unique pop-up book in Mr. Gruber's antique shop and embarks upon a series of odd jobs to buy it. But when the book is stolen, it's up to Paddington and the Brown family to unmask the thief. Refreshments will be served.

It's play time at the Vigo County Public Library! Join us for a 75
minute play-based program that gives parents and caregivers the
opportunity to spend time with their infants and toddlers in a group
setting. Librarians and community resource professionals will be
available for questions and consultations during the program.

Get your classmates together and hit the books in one of the Library's collaborative spaces for a pre-finals cram session. Or take a break and celebrate the end of the school year with refreshments in the Teen Space.

Digital Library Resources

Hoopla

OverDrive eBooks & Audiobooks

Zinio Online Magazines

Learn4Life Online Courses

Main Content

Staff Picks, New Books, & Bestseller Express

This book is a fascinating look at the inability of the Justice Department to prosecute individuals and corporations for white-collar crimes. The first section focuses on Enron and the subsequent fallout, followed by a lot of detail regarding cases, or lack thereof, against Arthur Andersen, KPMG and others.

Some of this book is a little dense with lawyer jargon and lists of law firms. However, those readers who wanted justice after the financial crisis and housing market crash will find themselves intrigued and probably outraged.

The Girl Who Smiled Beads is a well-written non-fiction selection that reads like a heartbreaking and, though the author may not like this description, inspiring novel. Alternating between her time as a refugee and her life after moving to America, the author, Clemantine Wamariya expertly compares and contrasts the two time periods. At one point Wamariya writes, "It was all so arbitrary: You should be killed, you should stand in line for food for seven hours, you should be fabulously educated and heaped with praise." How can there be such extremes in one individual’s life?

Author Rhodes-Courter is back discussing foster care – this time from the perspective of the foster parent instead of as the child in care. This follow up spans her college years to present day.

Unfortunately, she finds that the foster care system hasn’t changed all that much since she was in care. Kids are still bounced around frequently and some are returned to dangerous situations. While kids are in her care though, she does her best to fight for them. She searches for services, advocates for better care, and loves on the kids as best she can. Some of the children she fosters have favorable endings to their stories, but not all. One is particularly gut-wrenching.

All the while, she is still working on how her past is merging with her present. Stories of Rhodes-Courters’ visits with her biological family are both disappointing and heartening.

The reader will both adore and judge the foster families throughout the book: first the reader will feel respect for those helping the children caught in the system; then judgement because they are obviously stifling the teenagers; then excitement: adoption! Then more heartbreak.

Not all of the stories end in heartbreak, but this also isn’t a fairytale. Many children age out of the system each year, and before that, they are bounced around between many strangers’ houses. The author interviewed the children in care as well as the families who were caring for them, and often kept in touch after the child was no longer with the initial family. In some cases, it appeared as if the author was more concerned about the child’s welfare than either the foster family or the case workers.

To The End of June is an in-depth look at foster care, mainly focused on New York, as the author follows a handful of families over the course of a few years. Interspersed in the family narratives are discussions and thoughts from those who are, or were, employed within the foster care system, as well as the author’s own judgements and ideas about what is wrong and what could be done to help fix the care system.

Before they were household names, many of the now-famous actors mentioned throughout Homey Don’t Play That!: The Story of In Living Color and the Black Comedy Revolution were trying to get a foot in the door by way of stand-up comedy. The Wayans family, Jamie Foxx, Jim Carrey, and Eddie Murphy are just a handful of the names to be recognized in this book.

The reader is taken on a journey from Keenen Wayans’ early life, through his years producing In Living Color. To better explain the impact of In Living Color, the author includes many stories from early careers of African Americans in film and television, as well as the historical context of nationwide events and Fox’s foray into broadcast television.

Compiled from many interviews into a cohesive and easily-readable narrative, the author creates an intriguing read for anyone interested in African American history, television history, or those who simply enjoyed watching In Living Color.

This contemporary novel is the story of two sisters, Lucia, the younger sister, and Miranda, eight years older. After their mother's death and Lucia’s newly discovered mental illness, they are at odds for what they think is the best course of action to keep Lucia safe and “healthy” as Miranda always says. Lucia is a wanderer and traveler, and Miranda, the worrier, tries to fix everything.

The sisters’ lives take different paths, evermore widening the gap that’s come between them. Will they be able to come to an understanding? Or will their choices keep pushing each other apart?

Told in alternating narrators, the author writes the characters with such depth that the reader feels a certain empathy for all of them, even through their faults.

Told from sixteen-year-old Starr’s point of view, this heart-wrenching story describes her life – how she feels bounced between two different worlds and how she never feels fully herself. Then her worlds slowly begin to collide when her childhood best friend, Khalil, is fatally shot by a police officer and he becomes a national headline. Full of emotions and a wide cast of characters, this story is well told.

The audiobook version of this contemporary fiction work is wonderfully read and highly recommended. It enhances the dialogue and gives life to the characters in a way words on a page cannot. Be prepared with tissues.

Aiden Shaughnessy runs a busy and successful construction company. Since the death of his mother, he has strived to make his father proud while helping to raise his five siblings. Now his father is worried that Aiden is missing out on living his own life. Along comes interior designer Zoe Dalton who is hired on to help finish his custom built homes. Readers will enjoy finding out how Zoe’s heart and Aiden’s strength lead them to a happy ending. This title and the rest of The Shaughnessy Brothers’ series are available as an eBook on Hoopla Digital. Ask at the Reference Desk for assistance downloading this delightful romance novel.

Discover Upcoming Events at VCPL

Bingo Bunch

West Branch

West Branch Meeting Room B

Thursday, May 24 12:30 pm to 2:00 pm

Bingo Bunch meets weekly at the West Branch Library. Enjoy light refreshments as you play traditional and non-traditional Bingo. Prizes will be offered to the first to call out, "Bingo!" All levels of experience welcome. Bingo cards and number markers will be provided.

Watch This! The Post

Main Library

Meeting Rooms A, B, & C

Thursday, May 24 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm

A cover-up that has spanned four Presidents pushes The Washington Post's first female owner and publisher, Katharine Graham, and Ben Bradlee, a hard-driving editor-in-chief, to join an unprecedented battle between the press and the United States government. Based on a true story. Refreshments will be served.

Watch This! West Paddington 2

West Branch

West Branch Meeting Rooms A & B

Friday, May 25 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm

While searching for the perfect present for his beloved Aunt Lucy's 100th birthday, Paddington spots a unique pop-up book in Mr. Gruber's antique shop and embarks upon a series of odd jobs to buy it. But when the book is stolen, it's up to Paddington and the Brown family to unmask the thief. Refreshments will be served.